Website Optimisation Part 6: Visualising Where Visitors Are Clicking

This is the 6th instalment of a 7 article series on how to accelerate your online sales using the Marketing Results ‘hybrid’ approach to website optimisation.

See Part 1 | Part 2 | Part 3 | Part 4 | Part 5

Visualising Where Website Visitors Are Clicking

In a previous post I commented on a service called Crazy Egg which allows you to visualise where users are clicking on your website. This post expands on the use of Crazy Egg as a data visualisation tool.

Crazy Egg Heatmap Screenshot

Above: Crazy Egg generates an easy to understand ‘heatmap’ image of the Jay Abraham Asia Pacific website, revealing exactly where visitors are clicking.

Why do you want to visualise data anyway?

The first thing you may want to know is – with so many analytics packages and tracking tools on the market, who needs one more?

Here are 4 reasons:

1. When an easily identifiable “conversion” is difficult or irrelevant to track.

On many types of website that you may wish to optimise (e.g. a blog), an easily identify “conversion action” such as a sale or enquiry doesn’t occur. Crazy Egg provides meaningful information by showing you where users are clicking – what’s how and what’s not.

2. When you want a detailed picture of how users are engaging with your content.

Many services including Google Analytics offer some visualisation functions that reveal where users are clicking. Crazy Egg‘s output is much more detailed than other services I’ve seen. Rather than just telling you that a graphic or link was clicked, it shows you exactly where it was clicked. It also reveals when unlinked content was clicked (e.g. a graphic with no link).

3. When you want to decrease bounce rates and optimise clickthrough rates.

One effective technique of website conversion optimisation is to use your homepage bounce rate as a proxy for the effectiveness of your homepage in general. (Bounce rate refers to the percentage of visitors who leave your site without clicking onto another page. An ineffective homepage will have a high bounce rate.) Crazy Egg allows you to quickly identify what’s working and what’s not on your homepage so you can optimise accordingly.

4. When you want to quickly understand and communicate what’s happening.

Let’s face it – a picture is worth a thousand words. Not everyone thinks in terms of figures and data. A visual summary of user behaviour is a useful way to communicate what’s working and what’s not without resorting to long reports or reams of data. (This can come in handy if you’re forced to engage in internal battles about what content to have on your company website).

Generous “free” plan plus paid plans

Crazy Egg offers a number of service plans, starting with the free plan, which is more than sufficient to test drive the service (or as a complete solution for relatively small or low-traffic websites). The fee-based plans are big enough for enterprise applications.

Conclusion

Many companies have no formal process for deciding how content is organised on their website (often it’s either by decree or by committee). Tools such as Crazy Egg give you the power to make informed decisions on what works so you can optimise accordingly.

Crazy Egg is also a simple, visual alternative to data-driven tools that many people find either too boring or too difficult to interpret.

If you could get just 10% more visitors to click deeper into your website than they are now, what would that mean to the profitability of your online channel? For many websites, this would translate into a significant increase in results.

Will Swayne
Data visualiser

 

7-Part Website Optimisation Series

5 Comments »

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  1. Thanks for expanding on your previous post about Crazy Egg. I’m glad you are finding it useful, and sharing this with the rest of us.

    Comment by Hiten Shah — April 18, 2007 #

  2. You’re very welcome Hiten – I think Crazy Egg is a really useful service that allows people to visualise clickstreams a lot easier than before. And nice AJAX interface on the site too!

    Comment by Will — April 18, 2007 #

  3. Website Optimisation Part 7: Keyword Conversion Of Natural Search Campaigns…

    This is the 7th instalment of a 7 article series on how to accelerate your online sales using the Marketing Results “hybrid” approach to website optimisation.

    See Part 1 | Part 2 | Part 3 | Part 4 | Part 5 | Part 6

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    Trackback by Marketing Results Online Lead Generation Blog — April 27, 2007 #

  4. Since this article is published years ago, now Crazy Egg adds more features and visual too.

    If only Crazy Egg willing to share how it computes the heatmap, it will be very useful for every web designer in the world!

    Comment by Yudhista Aditya — January 18, 2009 #

  5. [...] Part 6: Visualising Where Users Are Clicking [...]

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